Covid-19: No ban on cruise, cargo ships from docking in M’sia, says Loke

PORT KLANG: There are no plans to ban cruise or cargo ships from docking at any of Malaysia’s ports in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak, Transport Minister Anthony Loke said today.

This is because each cruise ship passenger would undergo two rounds of health screening, undertaken by the government and ship operators, before they would be disallowed to disembark, he pointed out.

Cargo ship crew in turn would be screened by Malaysian health officers who would board the ships to conduct the screening.

This decision was made because if a ban was imposed on cruise or cargo ships, it would adversely impact the tourism sector and the country’s economy, the minister explained.

“Before any cruise ship anchors in Malaysia, it has to send us the list of passengers and undertake initial health screening. Any passenger who exhibits symptoms relating to influenza or COVID-19 will be quarantined and will not be allowed to disembark.

“Thermal scanners have also been placed at every entry point at the ports,” Loke told reporters after a working visit to the Boustead Cruise Centre Terminal here.

“So far, all the people on board cruise and cargo ships which have anchored at ports across the country are healthy, and Malaysians do not need to worry or be afraid,” he said, explaining that any passenger found to have arrived from Wuhan city and Hubei province in China would not be allowed entry.

Moreover, health screening would first be undertaken at the ports where cruise ships operated from.

Malaysia was only a ‘calling port’ where cruise ships would anchor for a day or two, said Loke, adding that many cruise ships which have called at Malaysian ports operated from Singapore where safety measures have been put in place to prevent the spread of COVID-19. – Feb 13, 2020, Bernama

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